Thursday, August 4, 2016

HR 5762 Introduced – Rail Hazmat Safety

Last month Rep. Bonamici (D,OR) introduced HR 5762, the Hazardous Materials Rail Transportation Safety Improvement Act of 2016. The bill provides a number of measures designed to increase the safety of liquid hazardous material transportation by rail.

The bill includes four separate titles:

• Creation and Funding of Hazardous Liquids Rail Spill Liability Account;
• Preparedness;
• Data Collection; and
• Authorization of Appropriations

Hazardous Liquids Rail Spill Liability Account


Title I of the bill would amend 26 USC 9509 to create a Hazardous Liquids Rail Spill Liability Account within the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund (OSLTF). The account would be used to fund Federal responses to oil and other liquid hazmat discharges resulting from accidents related to rail transportation of liquid hazardous materials. The account would also be used to fund various requirements of this bill.

Monies deposited in this account would come from deposits made to the OSLTF due to rail transportation incidents resulting from:

• Damages to natural resources which are required to be deposited in the Fund under 33 USC 2706(f);
• Amounts recovered by the Trust Fund under §2715; and
• Any penalty paid pursuant to 33 USC 1319(c) or §1321.

Additionally, §103 of the bill would add monies to the Account from fees established on the use of DOT 111 and CPC 1232 railcars for the transportation of hazardous flammable liquids. The fees would increase from an initial $175 per shipment in 2016 to a maximum of $1400 per shipment in 2018. The shipper would be required to pay these fees.

Preparedness


Title II of the bill address actions to be taken by the DOT to enhance potential responses to accidents related to the rail transportation of liquid hazardous materials. These actions include training of local first responders and implementation of a number of NTSB recommendations related to rail hazmat preparedness.

DOT would be required to add training standards for responding “to an accident or incident involving trains transporting at least 20 tank cars of flammable liquids or gases” {new §5115(b)(1)(B)} to the existing requirements of 49 USC 5115. Additionally, the DOT would be required to include planning and training for “to accidents and incidents involving trains transporting at least 20 tank cars of flammable liquids or gases” {new §5116(a)(1)(E)} to the allowable uses for grants under 49 USC 5116.

Section 204 of the bill would require DOT to implement the following National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) recommendations:

R–07–002, dated April 25, 2007, relating to real-time information regarding the identity and location of all hazardous materials on a train:
R–14–014, dated August 22, 2014 (relating to railroads providing communities and States with current commodity flow data and assisting with development of emergency operation and response plans;
R–14–018, dated August 22, 2014 (relating to ensuring that emergency response information carried by train crews is consistent with the Emergency Response Guidebook;
R–14–075 and R–14–076, dated December 30, 2014 (relating to allowable limits for track conditions; and
R–14–019, dated August 22, 2014 (relating to developing, implementing and periodically evaluating requirements for railroads that transport hazardous materials to conduct public education programs for communities along railroad hazardous materials routes.

Data Collection


Title III of the bill requires the Department of Transportation and the Department of Commerce (for the Census study) to conduct four studies, each with a mandated report to Congress. Those studies involve:

• National flammable rail fire preparedness survey (§301);
• Hazardous materials railcar census (§302);
• Energy train data collection (§303); and
• Train length study.

Authorization


Title IV of the bill provides authorization for spending to support some of the requirements of this bill. The authorizations include:

• High hazard rail shipments preparedness and training grants - $15 million per year for 2016, 2017, and 2018 {§401(a)};
• Track relocation and railroad inspection safety grants - $25 million per year for 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 {§401(b)};
• Data collection funding - $5 million for each of the three non-census studies mentioned above {§401(c)}; and
• Federal spill response funding under 42 USC 9604 (CERCLA) for flammable liquids and gasses rail-accident related spills - $100 million {§401(d)};

Moving Forward



Bonamici is not a member of any of the four committees to which this bill was referred for consideration. This means that it is unlikely that any of these committees will consider the bill. If the bill were to make it out of committee to be considered by the whole House, the bill would almost certainly be opposed by most of the Republican (and some Democratic) members of the House because of the additional spending authorized by the bill and the fees being required for the continued use of DOT 111 and CPC 1232 railcars for flammable liquid transport.

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